Mathematical modelling of tuberculosis epidemics
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1.
School of Science and Technology, Universidad Metropolitana, San Juan 00928-1150
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2.
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402 Tempe, AZ 85287-2402
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Received:
01 February 2008
Accepted:
29 June 2018
Published:
01 March 2009
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MSC :
Primary: 92D25, 92D30; Secondary: 92C60.
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The strengths and limitations of using homogeneous mixing and
heterogeneous mixing epidemic models are explored in the context
of the transmission dynamics of tuberculosis. The focus is on
three types of models: a standard incidence homogeneous mixing
model, a non-homogeneous mixing model that incorporates
'household' contacts, and an age-structured model. The models are
parameterized using demographic and epidemiological data and the
patterns generated from these models are compared. Furthermore,
the effects of population growth, stochasticity, clustering of
contacts, and age structure on disease dynamics are explored. This
framework is used to asses the possible causes for the observed
historical decline of tuberculosis notifications.
Citation: Juan Pablo Aparicio, Carlos Castillo-Chávez. Mathematical modelling of tuberculosis epidemics[J]. Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering, 2009, 6(2): 209-237. doi: 10.3934/mbe.2009.6.209
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Abstract
The strengths and limitations of using homogeneous mixing and
heterogeneous mixing epidemic models are explored in the context
of the transmission dynamics of tuberculosis. The focus is on
three types of models: a standard incidence homogeneous mixing
model, a non-homogeneous mixing model that incorporates
'household' contacts, and an age-structured model. The models are
parameterized using demographic and epidemiological data and the
patterns generated from these models are compared. Furthermore,
the effects of population growth, stochasticity, clustering of
contacts, and age structure on disease dynamics are explored. This
framework is used to asses the possible causes for the observed
historical decline of tuberculosis notifications.
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